70% off

Hong Kong Arrests Four Accused of Aiding Overseas Activists

Authorities earlier this week announced bounties for dissidents in U.S., U.K. and Australia Ivan Lam, a former leader of a now-defunct opposition party., was among those detained. Photo: TYRONE SIU/REUTERS By Austin Ramzy July 5, 2023 1:02 pm ET HONG KONG—The Hong Kong police arrested four men accused of violating the city’s national-security law as authorities intensified an effort to clamp down on dissent, including targeting activists abroad. The four men, ages 26 to 28, were accused of raising money “to support people who have fled overseas and continue to engage in activities that endanger national security,” the police said. The four weren’t immediately identified by the authorities but local media outlets showed the police taking away Ivan Lam, the former head of Demosisto,

A person who loves writing, loves novels, and loves life.Seeking objective truth, hoping for world peace, and wishing for a world without wars.
Hong Kong Arrests Four Accused of Aiding Overseas Activists
Authorities earlier this week announced bounties for dissidents in U.S., U.K. and Australia

Ivan Lam, a former leader of a now-defunct opposition party., was among those detained.

Photo: TYRONE SIU/REUTERS

HONG KONG—The Hong Kong police arrested four men accused of violating the city’s national-security law as authorities intensified an effort to clamp down on dissent, including targeting activists abroad.

The four men, ages 26 to 28, were accused of raising money “to support people who have fled overseas and continue to engage in activities that endanger national security,” the police said.

The four weren’t immediately identified by the authorities but local media outlets showed the police taking away Ivan Lam, the former head of Demosisto, a now-defunct opposition party.

Hong Kong authorities announced Monday that they would offer rewards of 1 million Hong Kong dollars, or about $128,000, for information on eight activists who are overseas. The eight were accused of violating the security law imposed by Beijing in 2020 and implemented by the local authorities to suppress pro-democracy protests. The law includes extraterritorial provisions stating it also applies to people outside the city.

The eight overseas dissidents are Australian lawyer Kevin Yam; Dennis Kwok, a lawyer and former Hong Kong lawmaker; Elmer Yuen, a prominent online commentator; Anna Kwok, the executive director of the U.S.-based Hong Kong Democracy Council; former Hong Kong lawmaker Ted Hui; former union official Mung Siu-tat; and activists Finn Lau and Nathan Law.

Dennis Kwok, a lawyer and former Hong Kong lawmaker, is among eight overseas activists being sought by Hong Kong authorities.

Photo: philip fong/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

They are based in the U.S., the U.K. or Australia, which have suspended extradition agreements with Hong Kong over concerns about Beijing’s growing sway over the former British colony, which returned to Chinese control in 1997.

Those countries all criticized the Hong Kong government’s efforts against overseas activists. The extraterritorial application of the security law “is a dangerous precedent that threatens the human rights and fundamental freedoms of people all over the world,” said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller. James Cleverly, the U.K. foreign minister, called the arrest warrants “a further example of the authoritarian reach of China’s extraterritorial law,” while Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said they were “unacceptable.”

John Lee, Hong Kong’s chief executive, rejected criticism of the bounties, saying the eight would be “pursued for life.”

The police said the four arrested on Wednesday in Hong Kong were accused of using social-media platforms and mobile apps to raise money for activists abroad. They also were accused of making online calls for Hong Kong’s independence, an activity banned under the security law, and posting messages that “provoked hatred” toward the Beijing and Hong Kong authorities.

Kevin Yam, one of the pro-democracy activists wanted by Hong Kong officials, is based in Australia.

Photo: Hiro Komae/AuBC/Associated Press

One of the eight wanted overseas, Nathan Law, preceded Lam as head of Demosisto. Law declined to discuss those arrested Wednesday, but said the government’s moves showed its intent to silence dissent both in Hong Kong and abroad.

“They are different continents, different ages, different focuses,” he said of the eight targeted by bounties. “Some are more moderate, some are more progressive, more aggressive. It’s a really broad spectrum. It signals a clear, all-round crackdown.”

Law, who fled to London in 2020, said he had been told for years that he was wanted in Hong Kong, but only learned the details this week.

“I don’t think anyone in Hong Kong’s history has ever warranted a bounty for political crimes,” he said. “This is new to all of us.”

Write to Austin Ramzy at [email protected]

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow

Media Union

Contact us >